Political colours
THE WEEK India|January 19, 2025
One of the greatest fashion statements of recent times was made in the Parliament's winter session by Rahul Gandhi and some opposition colleagues. India's most news-making politician (since his landmark Bharat Jodo Yatra) gave up his signature white polo T-shirt for a blue one.
NAMRATA ZAKARIA
Political colours

The colour switch was hardly a fashion mood swing; it signalled Gandhi’s unyielding commitment to India’s dalits and his demand for a national caste census.

Blue has long been associated with Dr B.R. Ambedkar. The economist, social reformer and architect of the Constitution of India was almost always seen in public wearing a threepiece sky-blue suit. It was not just because blue was his favourite colour; the choice of elite western attire signalled his own rising above his social circumstances, empowering India’s ‘lower castes’ to do the same. When Ambedkar launched the Scheduled Castes Federation in 1942, he adopted a blue flag with the Ashok Chakra in it. In 1957, when his followers founded the Republican Party of India, the flag was retained.

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